I asked myself whether it is possible for humans to flourish if they don't live good lives after reading an article by Markus Knee and Damiel
Haybron entitled "The Folk Concept of the Good Life:
Neither Happiness nor Well-Being” (SSRN Electronic Journal, Jan. 2024).
I am not
sure whether my attention was drawn to the article serendipitously or because
of some kind of algorithmic conspiracy. An email from ResearchGate alerting me
to the article arrived in my inbox on the same day that I had participated in a
roundtable discussion on human flourishing with Ed Younkins, Roger Bissell, and
Vinay Kolhatkar. We each presented views based on our three books:
Flourishing and Happiness in a Free
Society, by Edward W Younkins;
Modernizing Aristotle’s Ethics, by Roger E Bissell and Vinay Kolhatkar; and
Freedom, Progress, and Human
Flourishing,
by Winton Russell
Bates.
The roundtable discussion can be viewed on The Savvy Street Show. (The transcript of the discussion is available here.)
The article by Knee and Haybron
Knee and
Haybron tested whether the folk view that a person “leads a good life” differs
from the folk view that a person “is happy” and “is doing well” by asking survey
participants to respond to vignettes involving socially sanctioned
wrongdoing toward outgroup members. Their findings indicated that, for a large
majority, judgments of bad character strongly reduce ascriptions of the good
life, while having no impact at all on ascriptions of happiness or well-being. They conclude that the lay concept of a good life is
clearly distinct from those of happiness and well-being, likely encompassing
both morality and well-being, and perhaps other values as well. Importantly,
morality appears not to play a fundamental role among the folk in their views
of either happiness or well-being.
So, who are the folk? There were 283 participants in this
study (recruited on Prolific). It seems likely that the views of participants
are representative of Americans. The sample has a bias towards females (64%
female), but there is no obvious bias in the age of participants (average age
36, age range 19 to 78). I expect that folk in other countries with similar
cultural heritage would have similar views, but that has not been tested
Why should philosophers be interested in what folk think
about the meaning of concepts? Socrates wandered around Athens asking people
what they thought about the meaning of concepts, but I think modern philosophers
have different motives. Socrates asked questions that were designed to
encourage people to think more deeply rather than conducting surveys to assess
their current views about the meaning of concepts.
I think the main reason why philosophers should be
interested in what folk think about the meaning of concepts is because communication
is easier if definitions accord with common usage of terms.
Differences between the views of the folk and the
philosophers
Knee and Haybron claim that most philosophers assume that a
good life is equivalent to well-being. I am not sure that “assume” is the
correct word to use. Philosophers are usually careful to define the terms they
use, so perhaps the authors mean that philosophers’ definitions of a good life
and of well-being are at variance with the meaning that most folk give to those
concepts.
One of the philosophers who has influenced my understanding
of the meaning of human flourishing has adopted a definition of well-being that
seems to me to make it equivalent to a good life. As I explain in the
Introduction to Freedom, Progress, and Human Flourishing, Neera Badhwar uses
well-being in her definition of the highest prudential good (HPG):
“Well-being as the HPG consists of happiness in an objectively worthwhile life.”
I prefer to use the term flourishing, rather than well-being
because flourishing better captures the dynamic nature of individual human
development.
My understanding of human flourishing has also been strongly
influenced by Douglas Den Uyl and Douglas Rasmussen, who argue that human
flourishing can be best understood as “the exercise of one’s own practical
wisdom”.
I combined the Dougs’ perspective with Badhwar’s to define
human flourishing as:
“the exercise of one’s own practical wisdom, with integrity, in the pursuit and achievement of happiness in an objectively worthwhile life”.
Objective worth entails moral virtues and choice-worthiness.
In my book, I endorse the idea that the basic goods of a flourishing human constitute
“living well” and “are the actual elements of a good life”. Perhaps the folk might
not agree that the same elements are involved in the same proportions in “living
well” as in “a good life”. However, I
hope most folk would agree with me that “living well” requires more virtue than
“doing well”.
In any case, I claim that my view of human flourishing is close
to the folk view of leading a good life.
I am not aware of any tests having been made of the folk view of human flourishing. Casual observation suggests to me that the concept of human flourishing is not used widely enough for there to be a general “folk view” of what it means. When I tell folk I have written a book about human flourishing I am often asked what flourishing means and how it differs from related concepts such as happiness and thriving.
How do Knee and Haybron view human flourishing?
Knee and Haybron seem to view human flourishing as involving no more virtue than lay perceptions of happiness and well-being. They claim that their results suggest that “philosophers following Plato in claiming that serious immorality precludes flourishing are defending a less-than-intuitive position”. Neo-Aristotelians who claim that lack of integrity impairs flourishing would presumably be viewed in the same light.
In his book, The Pursuit of Unhappiness (published in
2008) Dan Haybron discussed the question of whether Genghis Khan - who claimed
to obtain happiness by conquering his enemies, taking their property, and
outraging their wives and daughters – could be considered to have been a flourishing
human (pp 159-60). In that context, he claims that it is “neither here nor
there” to assert that Genghis Khan didn’t have a good life – a life that
is desirable or choice-worthy. He is asserting that consideration of goodness
is irrelevant to the question of whether a person is flourishing.
A Google search for “human flourishing” suggests to me that a view of human flourishing which
has no reference to goodness is not currently widely accepted in the literature
discussing human flourishing. Most of the items I found near the top of the
list linked human flourishing to living a good life, being holistically good, engaging
in meaningful activities, having regard to traditional virtues etc.
Does it matter if different people define human flourishing
in different ways? Perhaps it adds only minor confusion to intellectual discourse.
However, the way terms are used in intellectual discourse is likely to
influence the folk view (common usage) over the longer term. I think it would be unfortunate if we end up with
a folk view of human flourishing that is indistinguishable from current folk
views of happiness.
Conclusion
An empirical study by Marcus Knee and Daniel Haybron has
found that the folk view that a person leads a good life differs from the folk
view that a person is happy or doing well. Judgements of bad character strongly
reduce ascriptions of the good life but have no impact on ascriptions of
happiness or well-being.
I claim that the view of human flourishing that I have
adopted is close to the folk view of living a good life.
However, Knee and Haybron seem to have a view of human
flourishing that has no reference to goodness. Their view of human flourishing
seems to be at variance with widely accepted views in relevant literature.
I doubt whether there is a folk view of human flourishing at
present but one seems likely to develop with increasing use of the term. In my
view, it would be unfortunate if we end up with a folk view of human flourishing
that is indistinguishable from folk views of happiness and doing well. Those
who wish to avoid that outcome should take advantage of every available
opportunity to assert that human flourishing means living a good life.
Addendum
1. The Aristotle “quote” at the top of this essay is my interpretation of part of Nichomachean Ethics, Book 1, Chapter 7. In the 5th paragraph, Aristotle considers the function (ergon) of a human (the capacities and activities that make a being human). That is the context in which he is considering what activities or actions eudaimonia, or human flourishing, requires. (Eudaimonia is often translated as happiness but it involves more than the modern, emotional state, concept of happiness). Aristotle asserts that human flourishing (the chief good) is an activity of the soul in accordance with virtue. What he means by “activity of the soul” is closely related to exercise of practical wisdom.
2. A revised version of this essay has been published on "The Savvy Street". The revised version incorporates quotes about flourishing from the books by Ed Younkins and Roger Bissell and Vinay Kolhatkar.